CH 1 (Introduction To HRM)
CH 1 (Introduction To HRM)
C H A P T E R T O n e
1
Introduction to
Human Resource
Management
Lecture Outline
Strategic Overview
B. Line and Staff Aspects of HRM – Although most firms have a human resource
department with its own manager, all managers tend to get involved in activities
like recruiting, interviewing, selecting, and training.
C. Line Managers’ HR Duties – Most line managers are responsible for line
functions, coordinative functions, and some staff functions.
G. Moving from Line Manager to HR Manager: Line managers may make career
stopovers in staff HR manager positions.
1. High-Tech Jobs – More jobs have gone high tech, requiring workers to
have more education and skills. Even traditional blue-collar jobs require
more math, reading, writing, and computer skills than ever before.
2. Service Jobs – Most newly created jobs are and will continue to be in the
service sector.
A. The New Human Resource Managers – Today, we’ve seen that companies are
competing in a very challenging new environment. Globalization, competition,
technology, workforce trends, and economic upheaval confront employers with
new challenges. In that context, they expect and demand that their human
resource managers exhibit the competencies required to help the company
address these new challenges proactively.
IV. The Plan of This Book – Each topic interacts with and affects the others, and all
should fit with the employer’s strategic plan.
A. Part 1: Introduction
D. Part 4: Compensation
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. Explain what HR management is and how it relates to the management process. There are five
basic functions that all managers perform: planning, organizing, staffing, leading, and controlling. HR
management involves the policies and practices needed to carry out the staffing (or people) function
of management. HR management helps the management process to avoid mistakes and get results.
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2. Give examples of how HR management concepts and techniques can be of use to all
managers. HR management concepts and techniques can help all managers to ensure that they get
results – through others. These concepts and techniques also help you to avoid common personnel
mistakes such as: hiring the wrong person; experiencing high turnover; finding your people not doing
their best; wasting time with useless interviews; having your company taken to court because of
discriminatory actions; having your company cited under federal occupational safety laws for unsafe
practices; having some employees think their salaries are unfair and inequitable relative to others in
the organization; allowing a lack of training to undermine your department’s effectiveness, and
committing any unfair labor practices.
3. Illustrate the HR responsibilities of line and staff managers. Line managers are someone's boss;
they direct the work of subordinates in pursuit of accomplishing the organization's basic goals. Some
examples of the HR responsibilities of line managers are: placing the right person on the job; starting
new employees in the organization (orientation); training employees for jobs that are new to them;
improving the job performance of each person; gaining creative cooperation and developing smooth
working relationships; interpreting the company’s policies and procedures; controlling labor costs;
developing the abilities of each person; creating and maintaining department morale; and protecting
employees’ health and physical conditions. Staff managers assist and advise line managers in
accomplishing these basic goals. They do, however, need to work in partnership with each other to
be successful. Some examples of the HR responsibilities of staff managers include assistance in
hiring, training, evaluating, rewarding, counseling, promoting, and firing of employees, and the
administering of various benefits programs.
4. Why is it important for a company to make its human resources into a competitive advantage?
How can HR contribute to doing so? Building and maintaining a competitive advantage is what
allows a company to be successful, and to remain profitable and in business. HR can make a critical
contribution to the competitive advantage of a company by building the organizational climate and
structure that allows the company to tap its special skills or core competencies and rapidly respond to
customers' needs and competitors' moves.
KEY TERMS
organization People with formally assigned roles who work together to achieve the
organization’s goals.
manager The person responsible for accomplishing the organization’s goals, and
who does so by managing.
management process The five basic functions of management are: planning, organizing,
staffing, leading, and controlling.
human resource The staffing functions of the management process. Or, the policies and
management (HRM) practices needed to carry out the "people" or human resource aspects
of a management position, including recruiting, screening, training,
rewarding, and appraising.
authority The right to make decisions, to direct the work of others, and give orders.
line authority Authority to direct the activities of people in his or her own department.
staff authority Staff authority gives the manager the right to advise other managers or
employees.
staff manager Assist and advise line managers in accomplishing the basic goals. HR
managers are generally staff managers.
nontraditional workers Those who hold multiple jobs, or who are “contingent” or part-time
workers, or people working in alternative work arrangements.
human capital Knowledge, education, training, skills, and expertise of a firm’s workers.